The Midland County, Texas, Commissioners Court is the governing
body for that county, and, like other such bodies, is established
by the State's Constitution and statutes. It consists of five
members -- a County Judge, elected at large from the entire county,
and four commissioners, one elected from each of the four districts
(precincts) into which the county is divided. Commissioners courts
exercise broad governmental functions in the counties, including
the setting of tax rates, equalization of assessments, issuance of
bonds, and allocation of funds, and they have wide discretion over
expenditures. One district of Midland County, which includes almost
all the City of Midland, had a population of 67,906, according to
1963 estimates. The others, all rural areas, had populations
respectively, of about 852; 414, and 828. In this action
challenging the County's districting, petitioner alleged that the
gross disparity in population distribution among the four districts
violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Three of the four commissioners testified at trial that population
was not a major factor in the districting process. The trial court
ruled for petitioner that each district under the State's
constitutional apportionment standard should have "substantially
the same number of people." An intermediate appellate court
reversed. The State Supreme Court reversed that judgment, holding
that, under the Federal and State Constitutions, the districting
scheme was impermissible "for the reasons stated by the trial
court." It held, however, that the work actually done by the County
Commissioners "disproportionately concerns the rural areas," and
that such factors as "number of qualified voters, land areas,
geography, miles of county roads, and taxable values" could justify
apportionment otherwise than on a basis of substantially equal
populations.
Held: Local units with general governmental powers over
an entire geographic area may not, consistently with the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, be apportioned among
single member districts of substantially unequal population.
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533
(1964). Pp.
390 U. S.
478-486.
Page 390 U. S. 475
(a) The Equal Protection Clause reaches the exercise of state
power, whether exercised by the State or a political subdivision.
P.
390 U. S.
479.
(b) Although the state legislature may itself be properly
apportioned, the Fourteenth Amendment requires that citizens not be
denied equal representation in political subdivisions which also
have broad policymaking functions. P.
390 U. S.
481.
(c) The commissioners court performs some functions normally
thought of as "legislative," and others typically characterized in
other terms; but, regardless of the labels, this body has the power
to make a large number of decisions having a broad impact on all
the citizens of the county. Pp.
390 U. S.
482-483.
(d) Though the Midland County Commissioners may concentrate
their attention on rural roads, their decisions also affect
citizens in the City of Midland. P.
390 U. S.
484.
406 S.W.2d
422, vacated and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, a taxpayer and voter in Midland County, Texas,
sought a determination by this Court that the Texas Supreme Court
erred in concluding that selection of the Midland County
Commissioners Court from single-member districts of substantially
unequal population did
Page 390 U. S. 476
not necessarily violate the Fourteenth Amendment. We granted
review, 388 U.S. 905 (1967), because application of the one man,
one vote principle of
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964), to units of local government is of broad
public importance. We hold that petitioner, as a resident of
Midland County, has a right to a vote for the Commissioners Court
of substantially equal weight to the vote of every other
resident.
Midland County has a population of about 70,000. The
Commissioners Court is composed of five members. One, the County
Judge, is elected at large from the entire county, and in practice
casts a vote only to break a tie. The other four are Commissioners
chosen from districts. The population of those districts, according
to the 1963 estimates that were relied upon when this case was
tried, was respectively 67,906; 852; 414, and 828. This vast
imbalance resulted from placing in a single district virtually the
entire city of Midland, Midland County's only urban center, in
which 95% of the county's population resides.
The Commissioners Court is assigned by the Texas Constitution
and by various statutory enactments with a variety of functions.
According to the commentary to Vernon's Texas Statutes, the
court:
"is the general governing body of the county. It establishes a
courthouse and jail, appoints numerous minor officials such as the
county health officer, fills vacancies in the county offices, lets
contracts in the name of the county, builds roads and bridges,
administers the county's public welfare services, performs numerous
duties in regard to elections, sets the county tax rate, issues
bonds, adopts the county budget, and serves as a board of
equalization for tax assessments."
[
Footnote 1]
Page 390 U. S. 477
The court is also authorized, among other responsibilities, to
build and run a hospital, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann., Art. 4492 (1966),
an airport,
id., Art. 2351 (1964), and libraries,
id. Art. 1677 (1962). It fixes boundaries of school
districts within the county,
id. Art. 2766 (1965), may
establish a regional public housing authority,
id., Art.
1269k, § 23a (1963), and determines the districts for election
of its own members, Tex.Const., Art. V, § 18.
Petitioner sued the Commissioners Court and its members in the
Midland County District Court, alleging that the disparity in
district population violated the Fourteenth Amendment and that he
had standing as a resident, taxpayer, and voter in the district
with the largest population. Three of the four commissioners
testified at the trial, all telling the court (as indeed the
population statistics for the established districts demonstrated)
that population was not a major factor in the districting process.
The trial court ruled for petitioner. It made no explicit reference
to the Fourteenth Amendment, but said the apportionment plan in
effect was not "for the convenience of the people," the
apportionment standard established by Art. V, 18, of the Texas
Constitution. The court ordered the defendant commissioners to
adopt a new plan in which each precinct would have "substantially
the same number of people."
The Texas Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the
District Court and entered judgment for the respondents, 397 S.W.2d
919 (1965). It held that neither federal nor state law created a
requirement that Texas county commissioners courts be districted
according to population.
Page 390 U. S. 478
The Texas Supreme Court reversed the Court of Civil Appeals,
406 S.W.2d 422
(1966). It held that, under "the requirements of the Texas and the
United States Constitutions," the present districting scheme was
impermissible "for the reasons stated by the trial court." 406
S.W.2d at 425. However, the Supreme Court disagreed with the trial
court's conclusion that precincts must have substantially equal
populations, stating that such factors as "number of qualified
voters, land areas, geography, miles of county roads and taxable
values" could be considered. 406 S.W.2d at 428. It also decreed
that no Texas courts could redistrict the Commissioners Court.
"This is the responsibility of the commissioners court, and is
to be accomplished within the constitutional boundaries we have
sought to delineate."
406 S.W.2d at 428 429. [
Footnote
2]
In
Reynolds v. Sims, supra, the Equal Protection Clause
was applied to the apportionment of state legislatures. Every
qualified resident, Reynolds determined, has the right to a ballot
for election of state legislators of equal weight to the vote of
every other resident, and that right is infringed when legislators
are elected from districts of substantially unequal population. The
question now before us is whether the Fourteenth Amendment likewise
forbids the election of local government officials from districts
of disparate population. As has
Page 390 U. S. 479
almost every court which has addressed itself to this question,
[
Footnote 3] we hold that it
does. [
Footnote 4]
The Equal Protection Clause reaches the exercise of state power
however manifested, whether exercised directly or through
subdivisions of the State.
"Thus, the prohibitions of the Fourteenth Amendment extend to
all action of the State denying
Page 390 U. S. 480
equal protection of the laws; whatever the agency of the State
taking the action. . . ."
Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U. S. 1,
358 U. S. 17
(1958). Although the forms and functions of local government and
the relationships among the various units are matters of state
concern, it is now beyond question that a State's political
subdivisions must comply with the Fourteenth Amendment. [
Footnote 5] The actions of local
government are the actions of the State. A city, town, or county
may no more deny the equal protection of the laws than it may
abridge freedom of speech, establish an official religion, arrest
without probable cause, or deny due process of law.
When the State apportions its legislature, it must have due
regard for the Equal Protection Clause. Similarly, when the State
delegates lawmaking power to local government and provides for the
election of local officials from districts specified by statute,
ordinance, or local charter, it must insure that those qualified to
vote have the right to an equally effective voice in the election
process. If voters residing in oversize districts are denied their
constitutional right to participate in the election of state
legislators, precisely the same kind of deprivation occurs when the
members of a city council, school board, or county governing board
are elected from districts of substantially unequal population. If
the five senators representing a city in the state legislature may
not be elected from districts ranging in size from 50,000 to
500,000, neither is it permissible to elect the members of the city
council from those same districts. In either case, the votes of
some residents have greater weight
Page 390 U. S. 481
than those of others; in both cases, the equal protection of the
laws has been denied.
That the state legislature may itself be properly apportioned
does not exempt subdivisions from the Fourteenth Amendment. While
state legislatures exercise extensive power over their constituents
and over the various units of local government, the States
universally leave much policy and decisionmaking to their
governmental subdivisions. Legislators enact many laws, but do not
attempt to reach those countless matters of local concern
necessarily left wholly or partly to those who govern at the local
level. What is more, in providing for the governments of their
cities, counties, towns, and districts, the States
characteristically provide for representative government -- for
decisionmaking at the local level by representatives elected by the
people. And, not infrequently, the delegation of power to local
units is contained in constitutional provisions for local home rule
which are immune from legislative interference. In a word,
institutions of local government have always been a major aspect of
our system, and their responsible and responsive operation is today
of increasing importance to the quality of life of more and more of
our citizens. We therefore see little difference, in terms of the
application of the Equal Protection Clause and of the principles of
Reynolds v. Sims, between the exercise of state power
through legislatures and its exercise by elected officials in the
cities, towns, and counties. [
Footnote 6]
Page 390 U. S. 482
We are urged to permit unequal districts for the Midland County
Commissioners Court on the ground that the court's functions are
not sufficiently "legislative." The parties have devoted much
effort to urging that alternative labels -- "administrative" versus
"legislative" -- be applied to the Commissioners Court. As the
brief description of the court's functions above amply
demonstrates, this unit of local government cannot easily be
classified in the neat categories favored by civics texts. The
Texas commissioners courts are assigned some tasks which would
normally be thought of as "legislative," others typically assigned
to "executive" or "administrative" departments, and still others
which are "judicial." In this regard, Midland County's
Commissioners Court is representative of most of the general
governing bodies of American cities, counties, towns, and villages.
[
Footnote 7] One knowledgeable
commentator has written of "the states' varied, pragmatic approach
in establishing governments." R. Wood, in Politics and Government
in the United States 891-892 (A. Westin ed.1965). That approach
has
Page 390 U. S. 483
produced a staggering number of governmental units -- the
preliminary calculation by the Bureau of the Census for 1967 is
that there are 81,304 "units of government" in the United States
[
Footnote 8] -- and an even
more staggering diversity. Nonetheless, while special purpose
organizations abound and in many States the allocation of functions
among units results in instances of overlap and vacuum, virtually
every American lives within what he and his neighbors regard as a
unit of local government with general responsibility and power for
local affairs. In many cases, citizens reside within and are
subject to two such governments, a city and a county.
The Midland County Commissioners Court is such a unit. While the
Texas Supreme Court found that the Commissioners Court's
legislative functions are "negligible," 406 S.W.2d at 426, the
court does have power to make a large number of decisions having a
broad range of impacts on all the citizens of the county. It sets a
tax rate, equalizes assessments, and issues bonds. It then prepares
and adopts a budget for allocating the county's funds, and is given
by statute a wide range of discretion in choosing the subjects on
which to spend. In adopting the budget, the court makes both
long-term judgments about the way Midland County should develop --
whether industry should be solicited, roads improved, recreation
facilities built, and land set aside for schools -- and immediate
choices among competing needs.
The Texas Supreme Court concluded that the work actually done by
the Commissioners Court "disproportionately concern[s] the rural
areas," 406 S.W.2d at 428. Were the Commissioners Court a special
purpose unit of government assigned the performance of
functions
Page 390 U. S. 484
affecting definable groups of constituents more than other
constituents, we would have to confront the question whether such a
body may be apportioned in ways which give greater influence to the
citizens most affected by the organization's functions. That
question, however, is not presented by this case, for while Midland
County authorities may concentrate their attention on rural roads,
the relevant fact is that the powers of the Commissioners Court
include the authority to make a substantial number of decisions
that affect all citizens, whether they reside inside or outside the
city limits of Midland. The Commissioners maintain buildings,
administer welfare services, and determine school districts both
inside and outside the city. The taxes imposed by the court fall
equally on all property in the county. Indeed, it may not be mere
coincidence that a body apportioned with three of its four voting
members chosen by residents of the rural area surrounding the city
devotes most of its attention to the problems of that area, while
paying for its expenditures with a tax imposed equally on city
residents and those who live outside the city. And we might point
out that a decision not to exercise a function within the court's
power -- a decision, for example, not to build an airport or a
library, or not to participate in the federal food stamp program --
is just as much a decision affecting all citizens of the county as
an affirmative decision.
The Equal Protection Clause does not, of course, require that
the State never distinguish between citizens, but only that the
distinctions that are made not be arbitrary or invidious. The
conclusion of
Reynolds v. Sims was that bases other than
population were not acceptable grounds for distinguishing among
citizens when determining the size of districts used to elect
members of state legislatures. We hold today only that the
Constitution
Page 390 U. S. 485
permits no substantial variation from equal population in
drawing districts for units of local government having general
governmental powers over the entire geographic area served by the
body.
This Court is aware of the immense pressures facing units of
local government, and of the greatly varying problems with which
they must deal. The Constitution does not require that a uniform
straitjacket bind citizens in devising mechanisms of local
government suitable for local needs and efficient in solving local
problems. Last Term, for example, the Court upheld a procedure for
choosing a school board that placed the selection with school
boards of component districts even though the component boards had
equal votes and served unequal populations.
Sailors v. Board of
Education, 387 U. S. 105
(1967). The Court rested on the administrative nature of the area
school board's functions and the essentially appointive form of the
scheme employed. In
Dusch v. Davis, 387 U.
S. 112 (1967), the Court permitted Virginia Beach to
choose its legislative body by a scheme that included at-large
voting for candidates, some of whom had to be residents of
particular districts, even though the residence districts varied
widely in population.
The
Sailors and
Dusch cases demonstrate that
the Constitution and this Court are not roadblocks in the path of
innovation, experiment, and development among units of local
government. We will not bar what Professor Wood has called "the
emergence of a new ideology and structure of public bodies,
equipped with new capacities and motivations. . . ." R. Wood, 1400
Governments, at 175 (1961). Our decision today is only that the
Constitution imposes one ground rule for the development of
arrangements of local government: a requirement that units with
general governmental powers over an entire
Page 390 U. S. 486
geographic area not be apportioned among single member districts
of substantially unequal population.
The judgment below is vacated, and the case is remanded for
disposition not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Interpretive Commentary, Vernon's Ann.Tex.Const., Art. V, §
18 (1955).
See also W. Benton, Texas: Its Government and
Politics 360-370 (1966); Municipal and County Government (J.
Claunch ed.1961); C. McCleskey, The Government and Politics of
Texas (1966).
[
Footnote 2]
The Texas Supreme Court determined that neither the State nor
the Federal Constitution requires that population be the sole basis
for apportioning the Midland County Commissioners Court. There is
therefore no independent state ground for the refusal to award the
relief requested by petitioner. And since the Supreme Court opinion
contemplated no further proceedings in the lower Texas courts, a
"final judgment" that population does not govern the apportionment
of the Commissioners Court is before us.
See Mercantile Nat.
Bank v. Langdeau, 371 U. S. 555
(1963);
Construction Laborers v. Curry, 371 U.
S. 542 (1963);
Radio Station WOW v. Johnson,
326 U. S. 120
(1945).
[
Footnote 3]
Cases in which the highest state courts applied the principles
of
Reynolds v. Sims to units of local government include
Miller v. Board of Supervisors, 63 Cal. 2d
343, 405 P.2d 857, 46 Cal. Rptr. 617 (1965);
Montgomery
County Council v. Garrott, 243 Md. 634, 222 A.2d 164 (1966);
Hanlon v. Towey, 274 Minn. 187,
142 N.W.2d
741 (1966);
Armentrout v. Schooler, 409 S.W.2d
138 (Mo.1966);
Seaman v. Fedourich, 16 N.Y.2d 94, 209
N.E.2d 778, 262 N.Y.S.2d 444 (1965);
Bailey v. Jones, 81
S.D. 617,
139 N.W.2d
385 (1966);
State ex rel. Sonneborn v. Sylvester, 26
Wis.2d 43, 132 N.W.2d 249 (1965).
Newbold v. Osser, 425
Pa. 478, 230 A.2d 54 (1967), seemed to assume application of
Reynolds. In opposition to these cases are only the
decision of the Texas Supreme Court in the case before us and
Brouwer v. Bronkema, 377 Mich. 616,
141 N.W.2d
98 (1966), in which the eight justices of the Michigan Supreme
Court divided evenly on the question.
Among the many federal court cases applying
Reynolds v.
Sims to local government are
Hyden v.
Baker, 286 F.
Supp. 475 (D.C.M.D.Tenn.1968);
Martinolich v.
Dean, 256 F.
Supp. 612 (D.C.S.D.Miss.1966);
Strickland v.
Burns, 256 F.
Supp. 824 (D.C.M.D.Tenn.1966);
Ellis v. Mayor of
Baltimore, 234 F.
Supp. 945 (D.C.Md.1964),
affirmed and remanded, 352
F.2d 123 (C.A. 4th Cir.1965).
[
Footnote 4]
A precedent frequently cited in opposition to this conclusion is
Tedesco v. Board of Supervisors, 43 So. 2d 514 (La.
Ct.App. 1949),
appeal dismissed for want of a substantial
federal question, 339 U.S. 940 (1950). Petitioner points out
that the Equal Protection Clause was not invoked in
Tedesco, where the districting of the New Orleans City
Council was challenged under the Privileges and Immunities Clause.
A more realistic answer is that
Tedesco, decided 12 years
before
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186
(1962), has been severely undermined by
Baker and the
succeeding apportionment cases.
See, among the great many
cases so concluding,
Delozier v. Tyrone Area School
Bd., 247 F. Supp.
30 (D.C.W.D.Pa.1965).
[
Footnote 5]
Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U. S. 1,
358 U. S. 16
(1958);
see, e.g., See v. City of Seattle, 387 U.
S. 541 (1967);
Thompson v. City of Louisville,
362 U. S. 199
(1960);
Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U. S.
1 (1949).
[
Footnote 6]
Inequitable apportionment of local governing bodies offends the
Constitution even if adopted by a properly apportioned legislature
representing the majority of the State's citizens. The majority of
a State -- by constitutional provision, by referendum, or through
accurately apportioned representatives -- can no more place a
minority in oversize districts without depriving that minority of
equal protection of the laws than they can deprive the minority of
the ballot altogether, or impose upon them a tax rate in excess of
that to be paid by equally situated members of the majority.
Government -- National, State, and local -- must grant to each
citizen the equal protection of its laws, which includes an equal
opportunity to influence the election of lawmakers, no matter how
large the majority wishing to deprive other citizens of equal
treatment or how small the minority who object to their
mistreatment.
Lucas v. Colorado General Assembly,
377 U. S. 713
(1964), stands as a square adjudication by this Court of these
principles.
[
Footnote 7]
Midland County is apparently untypical in choosing the members
of its local governing body from districts.
"On the basis of available figures, coupled with rough estimates
from samplings made of the situations in various States, it appears
that only about 25 percent of . . . local government governing
boards are elected, in whole or in part, from districts or, while
at large, under schemes including district residence
requirements."
Brief for the United States as
Amicus Curiae 22, n. 31,
filed in
Sailors v. Board of Education, 387 U.
S. 105 (1967), and the other 1966 Term local
reapportionment cases.
[
Footnote 8]
U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Census of
Governments 1967, Governmental Units in 1967, at 1 (prelim. rept.
Oct.1967).
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
I could not disagree more with this decision, which wholly
disregards statutory limitations upon the appellate jurisdiction of
this Court in state cases and again betrays such insensitivity to
the appropriate dividing lines between the judicial and political
functions under our constitutional system.
I
I believe that this Court lacks jurisdiction over this case
because, properly analyzed, the Texas judgment must be seen either
to rest on an adequate state ground or to be wanting in "finality."
The history of the Texas proceedings, as related in the Court's
opinion,
ante at
390 U. S.
477-478, clearly reveals that the decision of the Texas
Supreme Court disallowing the present county apportionment scheme
rests upon a state, as well as a federal, ground. The state ground
-- Art. V, § 18, of the Texas Constitution -- was clearly
adequate to support the result. This should suffice to defeat the
exercise of this Court's jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Department of
Mental Hygiene v. Kirchner, 380 U. S. 194;
Herb v. Pitcairn, 324 U. S. 117,
324 U. S.
125-126.
Nor does this Court have jurisdiction to review the Texas
Supreme Court's statement that, in reapportioning the county in the
future, the county commissioners may take into account factors
other than population. That
Page 390 U. S. 487
holding obviously does not amount to a "[f]inal judgment" within
the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1257. [
Footnote 2/1] The traditional test of finality of state
court judgments has been whether the judgment leaves more than a
ministerial act to be done.
See, e.g., Pope v. Atlantic Coast
Line R. Co., 345 U. S. 379,
345 U. S. 382;
Republic Natural Gas Co. v. Oklahoma, 334 U. S.
62,
334 U. S. 68. It
is clear that the acts which must be performed in order to bring
about a new apportionment of Midland County are very far from
ministerial in character, and conceivably might even result in
satisfying petitioner's demands without further litigation. For
example, since the statement of the Texas Supreme Court regarding
nonpopulation factors was merely advisory, and not mandatory, the
county commissioners might choose to reapportion the county solely
on the basis of population, thus leaving petitioner with nothing
about which to complain. Since the requirement of finality is an
unwaivable condition of this Court's jurisdiction,
see, e.g.,
Market St. R. Co. v. Railroad Comm'n, 324 U.
S. 548,
324 U. S. 551,
I consider that this case is not properly before us.
On these scores, I would dismiss the writ as improvidently
granted.
II
On the merits, which I reach only because the Court has done so,
I consider this decision, which extends the state apportionment
rule of
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533, to an estimated 80,000 units of local government
throughout the land, both unjustifiable and ill-advised.
I continue to think that these adventures of the Court in the
realm of political science are beyond its constitutional powers,
for reasons set forth at length in my dissenting opinion in
Reynolds, 377 U.S. at
377
U.S. 589 et seq.
Page 390 U. S. 488
However, now that the Court has decided otherwise, judicial
self-discipline requires me to follow the political dogma now
constitutionally embedded in consequence of that decision. I am not
foreclosed, however, from remonstrating against the extension of
that decision to new areas of government. At the present juncture,
I content myself with stating two propositions which, in my view,
stand strongly against what is done today. The first is that the
"practical necessities" which have been thought by some to justify
the profound break with history that was made in 1962 by this
Court's decision in
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.
S. 186, [
Footnote 2/2]
are not present here. The second is that, notwithstanding
Reynolds, the "one man, one vote" ideology does not
provide an acceptable formula for structuring local governmental
units.
A
The argument most generally heard for justifying the entry of
the federal courts into the field of state legislative
apportionment is that, since state legislatures had widely failed
to correct serious malapportionments in their own structure, and
since no other means of redress had proved available through the
political process, this Court was entitled to step into the
picture. [
Footnote 2/3] While I
continue to reject that thesis as furnishing an excuse for the
federal judiciary's straying outside its proper constitutional
role, and while I continue to believe that it bodes ill for the
country and the entire federal judicial system if this Court does
not firmly set its face against this loose
Page 390 U. S. 489
and short-sighted point of view, the important thing for present
purposes is that no such justification can be brought to bear in
this instance.
No claim is made in this case that avenues of political redress
are not open to correct any malapportionment in elective local
governmental units, and it is difficult to envisage how such a
situation could arise. Local governments are creatures of the
States, and they may be reformed either by the state legislatures,
which are now required to be apportioned according to
Reynolds, or by amendment of state constitutions.
[
Footnote 2/4] In these
circumstances, the argument of practical necessity has no force.
The Court, then, should withhold its hand until such a supposed
necessity does arise before intruding itself into the business of
restructuring local governments across the country.
There is another reason why the Court should at least wait for a
suitable period before applying the
Reynolds dogma to
local governments. The administrative feasibility of judicial
application of the "one man, one vote" rule to the apportionment
even of state legislatures has not yet been demonstrated. A number
of significant administrative questions remain unanswered,
[
Footnote 2/5] and the burden on
the federal courts has been substantial. When
Page 390 U. S. 490
this has thus far been the outcome of applying the rule to 50
state legislatures, it seems most unwise at this time to extend it
to some 80,000 units of local government, whose bewildering variety
is sure to multiply the problems which have already arisen and to
cast further burdens, of imponderable dimension, on the federal
courts. I am frankly astonished at the ease with which the Court
has proceeded to fasten upon the entire country at its lowest
political levels the strong arm of the federal judiciary, let alone
a particular political ideology which has been the subject of wide
debate and differences from the beginnings of our Nation. [
Footnote 2/6]
B
There are also convincing functional reasons why the
Reynolds rule should not apply to local governmental units
at all. The effect of
Reynolds was to read a long debated
political theory -- that the only permissible basis for the
selection of state legislators is election by majority vote within
areas which are themselves equal in population -- into the United
States Constitution, thereby foreclosing the States from
experimenting with legislatures rationally formed in other ways.
Even assuming that this result could be justified on the state
level, because of the substantial identity in form and function of
the state legislatures and because of the asserted practical
necessities for federal judicial interference referred to above,
the "one man, one vote" theory is surely a hazardous generalization
on the local level. As has been noted previously, no "practical
necessity" has been asserted to justify application of the rule to
local governments. More important, the greater and more varied
range of functions performed by local governmental units implies
that flexibility in the form of their structure is
Page 390 U. S. 491
even more important than at the state level, and that, by
depriving local governments of this needed adaptability, the
Court's holding may indeed defeat the very goals of
Reynolds.
The present case affords one example of why the "one man, one
vote" rule is especially inappropriate for local governmental
units. The Texas Supreme Court held as a matter of Texas law:
"Theoretically, the commissioners court is the governing body of
the county, and the commissioners represent all the residents, both
urban and rural, of the county. But developments during the years
have greatly narrowed the scope of the functions of the
commissioners court and limited its major responsibilities to the
nonurban areas of the county. It has come to pass that the city
government . . . is the major concern of the city dwellers, and the
administration of the affairs of the county is the major concern of
the rural dwellers."
406 S.W.2d
422, 428.
Despite the specialized role of the commissioners court, the
majority has undertaken to bring it within the ambit of
Reynolds simply by classifying it as "a unit of local
government with general responsibility and power for local
affairs."
See ante at
390 U. S. 483.
Although this approach is intended to afford "equal protection" to
all voters in Midland County, it would seem that it, in fact,
discriminates against the county's rural inhabitants. The
commissioners court, as found by the Texas Supreme Court, performs
more functions in the area of the county outside Midland City than
it does within the city limits. Therefore, each rural resident has
a greater interest in its activities than each city dweller. Yet,
under the majority's formula, the urban residents are to have a
dominant voice in the county government, precisely proportional to
their numbers, and little or no allowance may be made
Page 390 U. S. 492
for the greater stake of the rural inhabitants in the county
government.
This problem is not a trivial one, and is not confined to
Midland County. It stems from the fact that local governments,
unlike state governments, are often specialized in function.
[
Footnote 2/7] Application of the
Reynolds rule to such local governments prevents the
adoption of apportionments which take into account the effect of
this specialization, and therefore may result in a denial of equal
treatment to those upon whom the exercise of the special powers has
unequal impact. Under today's decision, the only apparent
alternative is to classify the governmental unit as other than
"general" in power and responsibility, thereby, presumably,
avoiding application of the
Reynolds rule. Neither outcome
satisfies
Reynolds' avowed purpose: to assure "equality"
to all voters. The result also deprives localities of the desirable
option of establishing slightly specialized, elective units of
government, such as Texas' county commissioners court, and varying
the size of the constituencies so as rationally to favor those whom
the government affects most. The majority has chosen explicitly to
deny local governments this alternative by rejecting even the
solution of the Texas Supreme Court, which held that the present
county apportionment was impermissible but would have allowed the
new apportionment to reflect factors related to the special
functions of the county commissioners court, such as "land areas,
geography, miles of county roads and taxable values," 406 S.W.2d at
428, as well as population.
Despite the majority's declaration that it is not imposing a
"straitjacket" on local governmental units,
see ante at
390 U. S. 485,
its solution is likely to have other undesirable
Page 390 U. S. 493
"freezing" effects on local government. One readily foreseeable
example is in the crucial field of metropolitan government. A
common pattern of development in the Nation's urban areas has been
for the less affluent citizens to migrate to or remain within the
central city, while the more wealthy move to the suburbs and come
into the city only to work. [
Footnote
2/8] The result has been to impose a relatively heavier tax
burden upon city taxpayers and to fragmentize governmental services
in the metropolitan area. [
Footnote
2/9] An oft-proposed solution to these problems has been the
institution of an integrated government encompassing the entire
metropolitan area. [
Footnote
2/10] In many instances, the suburbs may be included in such a
metropolitan unit only by majority vote of the voters in each
suburb. [
Footnote 2/11] As a
practical matter, the suburbanites often will be reluctant to join
the metropolitan government unless they receive a share in the
government proportional to the benefits they bring with them, and
not
Page 390 U. S. 494
merely to their numbers. [
Footnote
2/12] The city dwellers may be ready to concede this much in
return for the ability to tax the suburbs. Under the majority's
pronouncements, however, this rational compromise would be
forbidden: the metropolitan government must be apportioned solely
on the basis of population if it is a "general" government.
These functional considerations reinforce my belief that the
"one man, one vote" rule, which possesses the simplistic defects
inherent in any judicially imposed solution of a complex social
problem, [
Footnote 2/13] is
entirely inappropriate for determining the form of the country's
local governments.
No better demonstration of this proposition could have been made
than that afforded by the admirable analysis contained in the
dissenting opinion of my Brother FORTAS. But, with respect, my
Brother's projected solution of the matter is no less
unsatisfactory. For it would bid fair to plunge this Court into an
avalanche of local reapportionment cases with no firmer
constitutional anchors than its own notions of what constitutes
"equal protection" in any given instance.
With deference, I think that the only sure-footed way of
avoiding, on the one hand, the inequities inherent in today's
decision, and, on the other, the morass of pitfalls that would
follow from my Brother FORTAS' approach, is for this Court to
decline to extend the constitutional experiment of
Reynolds, and to leave the structuring of local
governmental units to the political process where it belongs.
Page 390 U. S. 495
[
Footnote 2/1]
28 U.S.C. § 125 provides:
"Final judgments or decrees rendered by the highest court of a
State in which a decision could be had may be reviewed by the
Supreme Court as follows. . . ."
[
Footnote 2/2]
The magnitude of this break was irrefutably demonstrated by Mr.
Justice Frankfurter in his dissenting opinion in
Baker,
369 U.S. at
369 U.S. 266,
369 U.S. 300-323.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Clark in
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U.S. 251,
369 U.S. 258-259; Auerbach, The
Reapportionment Cases: One Person, One Vote -- One Vote, One Value,
1964 Sup.Ct.Rev. 1, 68-70.
[
Footnote 2/4]
See, e.g., United States Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Relations, State Constitutional and Statutory
Restrictions Upon the Structural, Functional, and Personnel Powers
of Local Government 23-61 (1962); Weinstein, The Effect of the
Federal Reapportionment Decisions on Counties and Other Forms of
Municipal Government, 65 Col.L.Rev. 21, 23, n. 9 (1965).
[
Footnote 2/5]
One such question is the extent to which an apportionment may
take into account population changes which occur between decennial
censuses.
Cf. Lucas v. Rhodes, 389 U.
S. 212 (dissenting opinion of this writer). Another is
the degree of population variation which is constitutionally
permissible.
See Swann v. Adams, 385 U.
S. 440;
cf. Rockefeller v. Wells, 389 U.
S. 421 (dissenting opinion of this writer).
[
Footnote 2/6]
See the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Frankfurter
in
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U.S. 266, 300-324.
[
Footnote 2/7]
See generally W. Anderson E. Weidner, State and Local
Government 85-103 (1951).
[
Footnote 2/8]
See, e.g., W. Anderson & E. Weidner,
supra, at 171-174; United States Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Relations for use of House Committee on
Government Operations, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., Governmental
Structure, Organization, and Planning in Metropolitan Areas 7
(Comm.Print 1961).
[
Footnote 2/9]
See, e.g., United States Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Relations, Alternative Approaches to Governmental
Reorganization in Metropolitan Areas 9 (1962); United States
Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations for use of House
Committee on Government Operations, 87th Cong., 1st Sess.,
Governmental Structure, Organization, and Planning in Metropolitan
Areas 15-16 (Comm.Print 1961).
[
Footnote 2/10]
See, e.g., W. Anderson & E. Weidner,
supra, at 174-179; United States Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Relations, Alternative Approaches to Governmental
Reorganization in Metropolitan Areas (1962).
[
Footnote 2/11]
See, e.g., United States Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Relations, State Constitutional and Statutory
Restrictions Upon the Structural, Functional, and Personnel Powers
of Local Government 38, 44-53 (1962).
[
Footnote 2/12]
See Weinstein, The Effect of the Federal
Reapportionment Decisions on Counties and Other Forms of Municipal
Government, 65 Col.L.Rev. 21, 37 and n. 67 (1965);
cf.
United States Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations,
Factors Affecting Voter Reactions to Governmental Reorganization in
Metropolitan Areas 26-27 (1962).
[
Footnote 2/13]
Cf. H. Hart & A. Sacks, The Legal Process 662-669
(tent. ed.1958).
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS, dissenting.
I would dismiss the writ in this case as improvidently granted.
The Texas Supreme Court held the districting scheme unlawful under
the Texas Constitution. It ordered redistricting. In this difficult
and delicate area, I would await the result of the redistricting so
that we may pass upon the final product of Texas' exercise of its
governmental powers in terms of our constitutional responsibility,
and not upon a scheme which Texas itself has invalidated. [
Footnote 3/1]
The Court's opinion argues (
ante at
390 U. S. 478,
n. 2) that the Texas Supreme Court's order is a final judgment
because it contemplates no further proceedings in the Texas courts,
although it holds the present districting unlawful and requires the
Commissioners Court to redistrict. I do not reach this point.
The Court acts now to superimpose its own formula because it
disagrees with the standard for redistricting that the Texas
Supreme Court states. That standard directed redistricting on the
basis of the "number of qualified voters, land areas, geography,
miles of county roads and taxable values."
406 S.W.2d
422, 428. This standard may or may not produce a result which
this Court or I would find constitutionally acceptable. We cannot
know in advance how the melange of factors stated by the Texas
court would emerge from the mixing machine of the Texas authorities
who would deal with the problem. It is clear that the extreme
imbalance now prevailing would be eliminated, because the Texas
Supreme Court has held it unconstitutional. It might be
Page 390 U. S. 496
that the substitute finally worked out would be such that a
majority of this Court would not reject it as a denial of equal
protection of the laws. After all, at the last Term of this Court,
we accepted as passing the scrutiny of the Constitution, the
less-than-mathematically perfect plans in
Dusch v. Davis,
387 U. S. 112
(1967), and
Sailors v. Board of Education, 387 U.
S. 105 (1967).
The Court, however, now plunges to adjudication of the case of
Midland County, Texas, in midstream, apparently because it rejects
any result that might emerge which deviates from the literal thrust
of one man, one vote. Since it now adopts this simplistic approach,
apparently the majority believes that it might as well say so, and
save Texas the labor of devising an answer.
I am in fundamental disagreement. I believe, as I shall discuss,
that, in the circumstances of this case, equal protection of the
laws may be achieved -- and perhaps can only be achieved -- by a
system which takes into account a complex of values and factors,
and not merely the arithmetic simplicity of one equals one.
Dusch and
Sailors were wisely and prudently
decided. They reflect a reasoned, conservative, empirical approach
to the intricate problem of applying constitutional principle to
the complexities of local government. I know of no reason why we
now abandon this reasonable and moderate approach to the problem of
local suffrage and adopt an absolute and inflexible formula which
is potentially destructive of important political and social
values. There is no reason why we should insist that there is and
can be only one rule for voters in local governmental units -- that
districts for units of local government must be drawn solely on the
basis of population. I believe there are powerful reasons why,
while insisting upon reasonable regard for the population-suffrage
ratio, we should reject a rigid, theoretical, and authoritarian
approach to the
Page 390 U. S. 497
problems of local government. In this complex and involved area,
we should be careful and conservative in our application of
constitutional imperatives, for they are powerful.
Constitutional commandments are not surgical instruments. They
have a tendency to hack deeply -- to amputate. And while I have no
doubt that, with the growth of suburbia and exurbia, the problem of
allocating local government functions and benefits urgently
requires attention, I am persuaded that it does not call for the
hatchet of one man, one vote. It is our duty to insist upon due
regard for the value of the individual vote, but not to ignore
realities or to bypass the alternatives that legislative alteration
might provide.
I
I agree that application of the Equal Protection Clause of the
Constitution, decreed by this Court in the case of state
legislatures, cannot stop at that point. Of course, local
governmental units are subject to the commands of the Equal
Protection Clause.
Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U. S.
1,
358 U. S. 17
(1958). That much is easy. The difficult question, and the one
which the Court slights, is: what does the Equal Protection Clause
demand with regard to local governmental units?
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533
(1964), stands for the general proposition that the debasement of
the right to vote through malapportionment is offensive to the
Equal Protection Clause. It holds that, where the allegedly debased
vote relates to the State Legislature, a judicial remedy is
available to adjudicate a claim of such debasement, and that,
subject to some permissible deviation, the remedy is to require
reapportionment on a population basis. Although the Court's opinion
carefully emphasizes the appropriateness of allowing latitude to
meet local and special conditions, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 577-581, its insistence
Page 390 U. S. 498
upon the need for general correspondence of voting rights to
population has come to be called the one man, one vote rule.
[
Footnote 3/2]
This rule is appropriate to the selection of members of a State
Legislature. The people of a State are similarly affected by the
action of the State Legislature. Its functions are comprehensive
and pervasive. They are not specially concentrated upon the needs
of particular parts of the State or any separate group of citizens.
As the Court in
Reynolds said, each citizen stands in "the
same relation" to the State Legislature. Accordingly, variations
from substantial population equality in elections for the State
Legislature take away from the individual voter the equality which
the Constitution mandates. They amount to a debasement of the
citizen's vote and of his citizenship. [
Footnote 3/3]
But the same cannot be said of all local governmental units, and
certainly not of the unit involved in this case.
Page 390 U. S. 499
Midland County's Commissioners Court has special functions --
directed primarily to its rural area and rural population. Its
powers are limited and specialized, in light of its missions.
Residents of Midland County do not by any means have the same
rights and interests at stake in the election of the Commissioners.
Equal protection of their rights may certainly take into account
the reality of the rights and interests of the various segments of
the voting population. It does not require that they all be treated
alike, regardless of the stark difference in the impact of the
Commissioners Court upon them. "Equal protection" relates to the
substance of citizens' rights and interests. It demands protection
adapted to substance; it does not insist upon, or even permit,
prescription by arbitrary formula which wrongly assumes that the
interests of all citizens in the elected body are the same.
In my judgment, the Court departs from
Reynolds when it
holds, broadly and generally, that "the Fourteenth Amendment . . .
forbids the election of local government officials from districts
of disparate population."
Ante at
390 U. S. 478.
This holding, literally applied as the Court commands, completely
ignores the complexities of local government in the United States
-- complexities which,
Reynolds itself states, demand
latitude of prescription. The simplicity of the Court's ruling
today does not comport with the lack of simplicity which
characterizes the miscellany which constitutes our local
governments.
II
As of the beginning of 1967, there were 81,253 units of local
government in the United States. This figure includes 3,049 county
governments, 18,051 municipal governments, 17,107 township
governments, 21,782 school
Page 390 U. S. 500
districts, and 21,264 other special districts. [
Footnote 3/4] These units vary greatly in powers,
structure, and function. The citizen is usually subject to several
local governments with overlapping jurisdiction.
The Court in this case concedes that, in a "special purpose unit
of government," the rights of certain constituents may be more
affected than the rights of others. It implies that the one man,
one vote rule may not apply in such cases.
See ante at
390 U. S.
483-484. But it says that we do not here have to
confront the implications of such a situation. I do not agree.
I submit that the problem presented by many, perhaps most,
county governments (and by Midland County in particular) is
precisely the same as those arising from special purpose units. The
functions of many county governing boards, no less than the
governing bodies of special purpose units, have only slight impact
on some of their constituents and a vast and direct impact on
others. They affect different citizens residing within their
geographical jurisdictions in drastically different ways. [
Footnote 3/5]
Study of county government leaves one with two clear
impressions: that the variations from unit to unit are great, and
that the role and structure of county government are currently in a
state of flux. [
Footnote 3/6]
County governments
Page 390 U. S. 501
differ in every significant way: number of constituents, area
governed, [
Footnote 3/7] number of
competing or overlapping government units within the county,
[
Footnote 3/8] form, and means of
selection of the governing board, [
Footnote 3/9] services provided, [
Footnote 3/10] the number and functions of independent
county officials, [
Footnote 3/11]
and sources of revenue. [
Footnote
3/12]
Some generalizations can be made about county governments.
First, most counties today perform certain basic functions
delegated by the State: assessment of property, collection of
property taxes, recording of deeds and other documents, maintenance
of rural roads, poor relief, law enforcement, and the
administration of electoral and judicial functions. Some counties
have begun to do more, especially by the assumption of municipal
and policymaking functions. [
Footnote
3/13] But most counties still act largely as administrative
instrumentalities of the state. [
Footnote 3/14]
Second,
"[t]he absence of a single chief executive and diffusion of
responsibility among numerous independently elected officials are
general characteristics of county
Page 390 U. S. 602
government in the United States. [
Footnote 3/15]"
Those who have written on the subject have invariably pointed to
the extensive powers exercised within the geographical region of
the county by officials elected on a countywide basis and by
special districts organized to perform specific tasks. Often these
independent officials and organs perform crucial functions of great
importance to all the people within the county. [
Footnote 3/16]
These generalizations apply with particular force in this case.
The population of Midland County is chiefly in a single urban area.
[
Footnote 3/17] That urban area
has its own municipal government which, because of home rule,
[
Footnote 3/18] has relative
autonomy and authority to deal with urban problems. In contrast,
the Midland County government, like county governments generally,
acts primarily as an administrative arm of the State. It provides a
convenient agency for the State to collect taxes, hold elections,
administer judicial and peace-keeping functions, improve roads, and
perform other functions which are the ordinary duties of the State.
The powers of the Commissioners Court, which is the governing body
of Midland County, are strictly limited by statute and
constitutional provision. [
Footnote
3/19] Although a mere listing of
Page 390 U. S. 503
these authorizing statutes and constitutional provisions would
seem to indicate that the Commissioners Court has significant and
general power, this impression is somewhat illusory because very
often the provisions which grant the power also circumscribe its
exercise with detailed limitations.
For example, the petitioner cites Art. VIII, § 9, of the
Texas Constitution and Article 2352 of the Texas Civil Statutes as
granting the Commissioners Court authority to levy taxes. Yet, at
the time this suit was tried, Art. VIII, § 9, provided that no
county could levy a tax in excess of 80� on $100 property
valuation. And Article 2352 allocated that 80� among the
four "constitutional purposes" mentioned in Art. VIII, § 9
(not more than 25� for general county purposes, not more
than 15� for the jury fund, not more than 15� for
roads and bridges, and not more than 25� for permanent
improvements). [
Footnote
3/20]
Another example is the authority to issue bonds. It is true, as
the majority notes, that the Commissioners Court does have this
authority. Yet Title 22 of the Texas Civil Statutes sets up a
detailed code concerning how and for what purposes bonds may be
issued. Significantly, Article 701 provides that county bonds
"shall never be issued for any purpose" unless the bond issue
Page 390 U. S. 504
has been submitted to the qualified property-taxpaying voters of
the county.
More important than the statutory and constitutional
limitations, the limited power and function of the Commissioners
Court are reflected in what it actually does. The record and briefs
do not give a complete picture of the workings of the Commissioners
Court. But it is apparent that the Commissioners are primarily
concerned with rural affairs, and more particularly with rural
roads. One Commissioner testified below that the largest item in
the county budget was for roads and bridges. [
Footnote 3/21] And, according to that
Commissioner, the county does not maintain streets within the City
of Midland. The Commissioners seem quite content to let the city
council handle city affairs. "The thing about it is, the city of
Midland has the city council and the mayor to run its business, . .
. and we have a whole county to run. . . ."
As the Texas Supreme Court stated:
"Theoretically, the commissioners court is the governing body of
the county and the commissioners represent all the residents, both
urban and rural, of the county. But developments during the years
have greatly narrowed the scope of the functions of the
commissioners court and limited its major responsibilities to the
nonurban areas of the county. It has come to pass that the city
government with its legislative, executive and judicial branches,
is the major concern of the city dwellers. and the administration
of the affairs of the county is the major concern of the rural
dwellers."
406 S.W.2d at 428.
Moreover, even with regard to those areas specifically delegated
to the county government by statute or constitutional provision,
the Commissioners Court sometimes
Page 390 U. S. 505
does not have the power to make decisions. Within the county
government, there are numerous departments which are controlled by
officials elected independently of the Commissioners Court and over
whom the Commissioners Court does not exercise control. The
Commissioners view themselves primarily as road commissioners.
"The other department heads really have the say in that
department. We merely approve the salary. We do not hire anyone in
any department in Midland County except the road department. The
department heads of the other departments do hire the employees.
[
Footnote 3/22]"
As the Texas Supreme Court stated,
"the county commissioners court is not charged with the
management and control of all of the county's business affairs. . .
. [T]he various officials elected by all the voters of the county
have spheres that are delegated to them by law and within which the
commissioners court may not interfere or usurp."
406 S.W.2d at 428. These officials, elected on a direct, one
man, one vote, countywide basis, include the Assessor and Collector
of Taxes, the County Attorney, the Sheriff, the Treasurer, the
County Clerk, and the County Surveyor. [
Footnote 3/23] The County Judge, who is the presiding
officer of the Commissioners Court, is also elected on a countywide
basis. [
Footnote 3/24] Other
county officials and employees are appointed by the Commissioners
Court. [
Footnote 3/25]
Page 390 U. S. 506
The elected officials are generally residents of the city,
probably because of its preponderant vote. A Commissioner testified
that
"Every elected official . . . in Midland County today [except
the three rural commissioners], and it has been way back for years,
has been elected by the people that live here in the city limits of
Midland."
Another Commissioner testified that, of about 150 employees of
the county, only four of those who were not elected lived in the
rural precincts. Of all the elected officials, only the three rural
commissioners lived outside the city limits. [
Footnote 3/26] And, as I have noted, the fifth
member of the Commissioners Court, its Chairman, is the County
Judge who is elected at large in the county. [
Footnote 3/27] It is apparent that the city people
have much more control over the county government than the election
of the Commissioners Court would indicate. Many of the county
functions which most concern the city, for example, tax assessment
and collection, are under the jurisdiction of officials elected by
the county at large. [
Footnote
3/28]
Page 390 U. S. 507
In sum, the Commissioners Court's functions and powers are quite
limited, and they are defined and restricted so that their primary
and preponderant impact is on the rural areas and residents. The
extent of its impact on the city is quite limited. To the extent
that there is direct impact on the city, the relevant powers, in
important respects, are placed in the hands of officials elected on
a one man, one vote basis. Indeed, viewed in terms of the realities
of rights and powers, it appears that the city residents have the
power to elect the officials who are most important to them, and
the rural residents have the electoral power with respect to the
Commissioners Court which exercises powers in which they are
primarily interested.
In face of this, to hold that "no substantial variation" from
equal population may be allowed under the Equal Protection Clause
is to ignore the substance of the rights and powers involved. It
denies -- it does not implement -- substantive equality of voting
rights. It is like insisting that each stockholder of a corporation
have only one vote even though the stake of some may be $1 and the
stake of others $1,000. The Constitution does not force such a
result. Equal protection of the laws is not served by it.
Despite the fact, as I have shown, that many governmental powers
in the county are exercised by officials elected at large and that
the powers of the Commissioners Court are limited, the Court
insists that the Commissioners Court is a unit with "general
governmental powers." This simply is not so except in the most
superficial sense. The Court is impressed by the fact that the
jurisdiction of the Commissioners Court extends
Page 390 U. S. 508
over the entire area of the county. But this is more form than
reality.
Substance, not shibboleth, should govern in this admittedly
complex and subtle area, and the substance is that the geographical
extent of the Commissioners Court is of very limited meaning.
Midland County's Commissioners Court has its primary focus in
nonurban areas and upon the nonurban people. True, the county's
revenues come largely from the City of Midland. But the
Commissioners Court fixes the tax rate subject to the specific
limitations provided by the legislature. It must spend tax revenues
in the categories and percentages which the legislature fixes.
Taxes are assessed and collected not by it, but by an official
elected on a countywide basis. It is quite likely that, if the city
dwellers were given control of the Commissioners Court, they would
reduce the load, because it is spent primarily in the rural area.
This is a state matter. If the State Legislature, in which
presumably the city dwellers are fairly represented (
Reynolds
v. Sims), wishes to reduce the load, it may do so. But unless
we are ready to adopt the position that the Federal Constitution
forbids a State from taxing city dwellers to aid their rural
neighbors, the fact that city dwellers pay most taxes should not
determine the composition of the county governing body. We should
not use tax impact as the sole or controlling basis for vote
distribution. It is merely one in a number of factors, including
the functional impact of the county government, which should be
taken into account in determining whether a particular voting
arrangement results in reasonable recognition of the rights and
interests of citizens. Certainly neither tax impact nor the
relatively few services rendered within the City of Midland should
compel the State to vest practically all voting power in the city
residents to the
Page 390 U. S. 509
virtual denial of a voice to those who are dependent on the
county government for roads, welfare, and other essential
services.
III
I have said that, in my judgment, we should not decide this
case, but should give Texas a chance to come up with an acceptable
result. Texas' own courts hold that the present system is
constitutionally intolerable. The 1963 population estimates relied
upon in this case show that the district which includes most of the
City of Midland, with 67,906, people has one representative, and
the three rural districts, each of which has its own
representative, have 852; 414, and 828 people, respectively. While
it may be that this cannot be regarded as satisfying the Equal
Protection Clause under any view, I suggest that applying the
Court's formula merely errs in the opposite direction: only the
city population will be represented, and the rural areas will be
eliminated from a voice in the county government to which they must
look for essential services. With all respect, I submit that this
is a destructive result. It kills the very value which it purports
to serve. Texas should have a chance to devise a scheme which,
within wide tolerance, eliminates the gross underrepresentation of
the city, but at the same time provides an adequate, effective
voice for the nonurban, as well as the urban, areas and peoples.
[
Footnote 3/29]
[
Footnote 3/1]
The Texas Supreme Court noted that the Commissioners Court, and
not Texas' judicial courts, has power to redistrict. This view may
prove to be troublesome, but we are not bound to anticipate either
that the Commissioners Court will not properly do the job or that
Texas will not otherwise put its house in order in Midland
County.
[
Footnote 3/2]
Reynolds v. Sims did not put the Equal Protection
Clause to a radical or new use. Its holding is in the mainstream of
our equal protection cases. Our cases hold that people who stand in
the same relationship to their government cannot be treated
differently by that government. To do so would be to mark them as
inferior, "implying inferiority in civil society" (
Strauder v.
West Virginia, 100 U. S. 303,
100 U. S. 308
(1880)), or "inferiority as to their status in the community"
(
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.
S. 483,
347 U. S. 494
(1954)). It would be to treat them as if they were, somehow, less
than people.
[
Footnote 3/3]
"Since legislatures are responsible for enacting laws by which
all citizens are to be governed, they should be bodies which are
collectively responsive to the popular will. And the concept of
equal protection has been traditionally viewed as requiring the
uniform treatment of persons standing in the same relation to the
governmental action questioned or challenged. With respect to the
allocation of legislative representation, all voters, as citizens
of a State, stand in the same relation regardless of where they
live. . . . To the extent that a citizen's right to vote is
debased, he is that much less a citizen."
377 U.S. at
377 U.S.
565,
377 U.S.
567.
[
Footnote 3/4]
U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Census of
Governments 1967, Governmental Units in 1967, at 1 (prelim. rept.
Oct.1967).
[
Footnote 3/5]
If these complexities do not exist in a given case (that is, if
the functions of the governing unit involved have an essentially
equal impact upon all the citizens within its geographical
jurisdiction), then the one man, one vote rule would apply as it
did in
Reynolds. Some city councils, for example, are in
effect miniature state legislatures. Some county governing units
have geographical jurisdiction which is coextensive with a city or
which includes only reasonably homogeneous rural areas.
[
Footnote 3/6]
See C. Adrian, State and Local Governments 210-217
(1960); C. Snider, Local Government in Rural America 119-139 (1957)
(hereafter cited as Snider); International Union of Local
Authorities, Local Government in the United States of America 13-14
(1961) (hereafter cited as Local Government); National Municipal
League, Model County Charter xi-xxxviii (1956).
See
generally S. Duncombe, County Government in America (1966)
(hereafter cited as Duncombe).
[
Footnote 3/7]
See Duncombe 3-5.
[
Footnote 3/8]
See U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census,
Census of Governments: 1962, Governmental Organization, Table
17.
[
Footnote 3/9]
See U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census,
Governing Boards of County Governments: 1965.
[
Footnote 3/10]
See Duncombe 70-102.
[
Footnote 3/11]
See Duncombe 41-63.
[
Footnote 3/12]
See U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census,
Census of Governments: 1962, Finances of County Governments, Table
11.
[
Footnote 3/13]
See Duncombe 13-14.
[
Footnote 3/14]
See W. Anderson & E. Weidner, State and Local
Government 30-31 (1951); Snider 131-134.
[
Footnote 3/15]
Local Government, at 14.
[
Footnote 3/16]
See, e.g., ibid.; Duncombe 41-63; Snider 44-45,
252-254.
[
Footnote 3/17]
In 1962, the population of Midland County was 67,717. More than
62,000 lived in the urban area governed by the municipal
government. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Census of
Governments: 1962, Governmental Organization 186.
[
Footnote 3/18]
Tex.Const., Art. XI, § 5; R. Young, The Place System in
Texas Elections (Institute of Public Affairs, University of Texas,
1965) 38.
[
Footnote 3/19]
See W. Benton, Texas, Its Government and Politics
360-362 (1966) (hereafter cited as Benton); S. MacCorkle and D.
Smith, Texas Government 339-340 (1964) (hereafter cited as
MacCorkle); C. Patterson, S. McAlister, and G. Hester, State and
Local Government in Texas 384-385, 388 (1961) (hereafter cited as
Patterson); Municipal and County Government 113-114 (J. Claunch
ed.1961); F. Gantt, I. Dawson, and L. Hagard (eds.), Governing
Texas, Documents and Readings 254 (1966); C. McCleskey, The
Government and Politics of Texas 303-304, 305 (1966) (hereafter
cited as McCleskey). There is a home rule provision in the Texas
Constitution which applies to counties, Art. IX, § 3. But that
provision is virtually unworkable and, as of 1966, there were no
counties operating under home rule. Benton 372-375.
See
also McCleskey 304, and MacCorkle 341.
[
Footnote 3/20]
The 1967 amendment to Art. VIII, § 9, maintains the
80� limitation and still speaks of "the four constitutional
purposes." It provides, though, that the county "may" put all tax
money into one general fund without regard to the purpose or the
source of each tax. For a discussion of the county's taxing power
and other sources of county revenue,
see Benton
367-368.
[
Footnote 3/21]
This testimony appears in the typed transcript of record but not
in the portions printed by the parties.
[
Footnote 3/22]
See 390
U.S. 474fn3/21|>n. 21,
supra. Commentators on Texas
local government have noted this lack of control by the
Commissioners Court.
See, e.g., MacCorkle 344-345;
McCleskey 307, 310; Benton 369.
[
Footnote 3/23]
Article VIII, § 14; Art. V, § 21; Art. V, § 23;
Art. XVI, § 44; Art. V, § 20, and Art. XVI, § 44, of
the Texas Constitution, respectively.
[
Footnote 3/24]
Article V, §§ 15, 18, of the Texas Constitution.
[
Footnote 3/25]
For a description of county officials generally and of their
functions,
see McCleskey 306-310, MacCorkle 335-339, and
Patterson 390-392. For a listing of county officials who are
elected,
see U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census,
Census of Governments 1967, Elective Offices of State and Local
Governments 117-118 (prelim.rept. Aug.1967).
[
Footnote 3/26]
See 390
U.S. 474fn3/21|>n. 21,
supra.
[
Footnote 3/27]
390
U.S. 474fn3/24|>Note 24,
supra. There was testimony
below to the effect that the county judge votes only in case of a
tie vote. But it appears that this limitation may be
self-imposed.
"The county judge enjoys equal voting rights with all the other
members of the commissioners' court, which includes the right to
make or second any motion and the right to vote whether there be a
tie among the votes of other members of the court or not."
1 Opinions of the Attorney General of Texas 453 (No. 0-1716,
1939).
See McCleskey 307,
390
U.S. 474fn3/27|>n. 27.
[
Footnote 3/28]
The Assessor and Collector of Taxes is elected by the qualified
voters of the county at large. Tex.Const., Art. VIII, § 14;
U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Census of Governments
1967, Elective Offices of State and Local Governments 117
(prelim.rept. Aug.1967). The Commissioners Court has power to
adjust the Assessor and Collector's valuation. Art. VIII, §
18, of the Texas Constitution. However, testimony below indicated
that the Commissioners Court sits to hear taxpayer complaints only
a few days each year. The Commissioners Court does not go over the
Assessor and Collector's tax rendition sheets before he sends
notices to the taxpayers.
[
Footnote 3/29]
Cf. Weinstein, The Effect of the Federal
Reapportionment Decisions on Counties and Other Forms of Municipal
Government, 65 Col.L.Rev. 21, 40-49 (1965).
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, dissenting.
I would dismiss the writ as improvidently granted for the
reasons stated by MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE FORTAS.
Page 390 U. S. 510
Since the Court does reach the merits, however, I add that I
agree with most of what is said in the thorough dissenting opinion
of MR. JUSTICE FORTAS. Indeed, I would join that opinion were it
not for the author's unquestioning endorsement of the doctrine of
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533. I
continue to believe that the Court's opinion in that case
misapplied the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
-- that the apportionment of the legislative body of a sovereign
State, no less than the apportionment of a county government, is
far too subtle and complicated a business to be resolved as a
matter of constitutional law in terms of sixth-grade arithmetic. My
views on that score, set out at length elsewhere,
* closely parallel
those expressed by MR. JUSTICE FORTAS in the present case.
*
Lucas v. Colorado General Assembly, 377 U.
S. 713,
377 U. S. 744
(dissenting opinion).